In England a coherent and magnificent style of book illumination was developed in the 960s in the scriptorium at Winchester. Narrative compositions and initial letters are framed in arched and rectangular bossed (articulated with circular and square ornamental motifs) trellises of golden bars filled with rampant foliage; figures are clothed in shells of brittle broken drapery, with elaborate zigzagged contours and fluttering hems (e.g., King Edgar’s Charter to the New Minster, Winchester, 966; the Benedictional [a book of episcopal Eucharistic blessings] of St. Ethelwold, 971–984). During the following century scriptoria in southern England produced a considerable number of books of ...(100 of 73439 words)